Who is India’s worst Prime Minister?

The debate on who India’s best prime minister is can be agreeably contentious and healthy. But the choice becomes absolutely restricted and nauseating when it comes to choosing the worst.

With Independence, we gave ourselves a resplendent Constitution that envisages a popularly elected head of the executive called the prime minister.

The spirit of the Constitution is mutilated whenever the country is thrust with a prime minister who is not a popular leader. It is because a selected prime minister inherently feels that he owes nothing to the people of this country and survives on ‘extra-constitutional’ mandate given by ‘extra-constitutional’ powers which invariably have ‘extra-territorial’ loyalty and distraction.

In the history of democracies there have been accidental prime ministers indeed. They come by accident due to transient aberrations in the established constitutional process and exit as soon as the constitutional process is restored.

But, only when the constitutional process is totally subverted by internal and external forces does the selected prime minister get a long haul in the office.

As the guiding leader of the country a Prime Minister should have a vision, and a Cabinet to help realize that vision. No member of the team need look beyond his shoulder.

All that they should be aspiring for is praise and the satisfaction of the head of the cabinet i.e the prime minister. Rewards and punishments to Cabinet colleagues should be the sole prerogative of the leader.

No other person in the ruling party or the coalition should be able to dwarf the prime minister by issuing certificates of performance from time to time.

A prime minister need not be a fiery orator but should be politically articulate and must exude political conviction. A person who cannot enthuse others by his communication skills can be anything but a leader. Often, the eyes of leaders do more talking than their tongues.

Looking blank and being tongue-tied cannot be passed off as decency and again, decency cannot be a substitute for effective and transparent communication.

As a young boy, when Churchill was selected for Royal Military College, Sandhurst, he went to the doctor to get rid of the lisp in his speech. When told that his problem was not a disqualification for the military he astonished the doctor by saying that he intended to serve as a soldier for only a few years, following which he would take to politics and become a statesman.

A prime minister should not have ostentatious life style and must avoid conspicuous consumption, but more importantly should brook no corruption even by coalition partners. The integrity in the governance by the prime minister can be gauged by the number and scale of judicial interventions in exposing corruption in the government.

It is not only an indictment of the government but the institution of executive and the constitutional imbalance between the organs of the State. Other organs are forced to assert when the executive becomes corrupt and morally weak.

Only a prime minister with depraved sense of nationalism will allow his cabinet colleagues to abuse and erode constitutional institutions. Any Opposition that allows a Prime Minister who consciously or otherwise facilitates corruption to continue is equally guilty of sedition.

An elected prime minister can be given some benefit of doubt with regards to vote-bank politics. An elected but statesman like prime minister, rises above it in favour of nation-building. Nevertheless if a selected prime minister indulges in vote-bank politics he can be considered dangerous because his compulsions could then only be ambition, and internal and external pulls. Such a prime minister is always under blackmail.

A prime minister’s body language and demeanour are important. He should be able to look straight into the eyes of the leaders of other countries. He should treat ‘certificates’ or endorsements by global leaders on his performance with nonchalance, if not suspicion. No world leader should have the gumption to adopt a supercilious, haughty or indulgent posture in dealing with him or her, least of all by patting them on the back.

When it comes to national interest a prime minister should be a tough customer. A compromised prime minister will substantially lack in such attributes.

During the independence struggle, especially after the end of so called ‘extremist phase’ and beginning of the ‘agitation phase’, leaders with barrister degree became the spear-heads of the movement. Even then there were insinuations against a few of them by Intelligence agencies during their stay in Britain.

Some of them continued to send their children to that country for general education even after Independence, even if institutions in India had better education to offer. But those were relatively innocent times.

It is now no longer secret that countries offer educational and job opportunities to wards of key dignitaries for creating diplomatic and Intelligence leverages.

Ideally, a prime minister should not have had extended education or employment abroad and his or children should not be citizens of other countries. The danger lies in the fact that this phenomenon by and large is unidirectional.

In any case, if successive prime ministers have not created educational facilities appropriate for wards of country’s decision makers they have been amiss in their national duty.

Notwithstanding the source of political sustenance the measure of a prime-minister’s patriotism and stature is the manner he or she deals with issues of common concern to the country like security and corruption , no matter who raises it.

A conscientious and patriotic prime minister will not downplay issues of corruption and impropriety that rob the very soul of the nation even if his own party members or benefactors are involved. The lack of seriousness on issues like black money in Swiss banks can be discerned by the people ,thanks to the media and more so social media, and is construed as admission of guilt.

A prime minister should also be judged by the level of security the people of the country enjoy and the respect and concern he or she treats the armed forces with. Only a subverted prime minister plays politics with the armed forces and plays one security agency against the other. George Bush during his visit to Andhra Pradesh met American soldiers who were in India for joint military exercise and then had word of advice for the then Chief Minister the Late Y Rajshekhar Reddy as to how a head of state should treat the armed forces.

Finally a prime minister whether selected or elected must add muscle to the constitutional culture and democracy as such. He or she should be thankful to the people of India and no one else. It is his or her bounden duty to the people of India to pave the way for a meritorious prime minister. A prime minister is a sinner if he or she acquiesces to extra-constitutional arrangements whether legally or morally.

To warm the prime minister’s seat for someone undeserving as an act of fealty amounts to betrayal of the people of India and a grave sin committed on the motherland.

Confronted with intractable moral dilemmas, a prime minister should have the courage to throw it all lest his remaining life and his future generations will live in ignominy and history will be most unkind to him.

Within these essential parameters I leave it for the readers to choose India’s worst prime minister.

RSN Singh is a former military intelligence officer who later served in the Research and Analysis Wing, or R&AW. He is the author of two books: Asian Strategic and Military Perspective and Military Factor in Pakistan.